TIME
EUROPE
June 12,
2000 VOL. 155 NO. 23
Reliving
Apartheid Horrors
The
trial of a South African cardiologist accused of
murder reopens old wounds
By PETER
HAWTHORNE Pretoria
After two years of harrowing depositions before
the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, South
Africans may have thought they had heard the
worst, and the last, of the evil deeds of the
apartheid era. That was until the trial began of
Wouter Basson, an experienced heart surgeon who
still works as a part-time cardiologist at a
state hospital. According to the 350-page
indictment Basson now faces in the Pretoria High
Court, he is responsible for the murder of at
least 16 antiapartheid activists and conspiracy
to kill many more. The trial of the 50-year-old
doctor, which began last October, is likely to
last as long as the T.R.C. hearings. Like that
tribunal, it is producing testimony ranging from
the bizarre to the horrific.
The son of a South African police colonel and a
well-known opera singer, Basson was a brigadier
in the army at the age of 30 and founded a
special medical battalion that gave operational
support to South Africa's special forces fighting
against antiapartheid guerrillas in Angola,
Mozambique and Namibia. Apart from murder, the 61
charges he now faces include drug possession and
dealing, and fraud involving more than $10
million. These relate to his activities as head
of Project Coast, the apartheid government's
military chemical and biological warfare program.
It is alleged that Basson supplied drugs and
poisons that were administered to activists
executed by military "hit men."
Arrested in 1997 for illegal drug dealing and
fraud, Basson who is on bail of $12,500
denies all the charges. He maintains that
his work with Project Coast was to develop a
defensive capability against chemical or
biological attacks, and that his financial
affairs were part of official undercover
operations necessary to circumvent foreign
sanctions against apartheid.
In a brief appearance before the Truth Commission
in 1998, Basson who received the
government's Order of the Southern Cross award
for his role with Project Coast scoffed at
suggestions that he had worked on sinister
biological programs aimed at controlling the
birthrate of black people. But he could not
resist mentioning that his military scientists
had manufactured a range of lethal poisons and
toxins, including botulinum, one gram of which,
he said, can kill a million people. He told the T.R.C.
that one of his responsibilities had been to
ensure that Nelson Mandela was protected from any
chemical or biological attack while he was in
jail. A witness in Basson's trial has already
said quite the opposite: that he and Basson had
discussed a scenario in which Mandela might be
given a cancer-causing agent before his release.
Fired from the defense force in 1992 in a purge
by the then President F.W. de Klerk, Basson was
rehired for a time as a consultant physician by
the post-apartheid government to help maintain
the scientific defensive capability that he
helped to develop. "Basson is not an
ordinary man, he is a formidable man,"
admitted a prosecution lawyer as the state hauled
out 30 boxes of files and a list of more than 200
proposed witnesses.
Already these witnesses, though not all directly
implicating Basson, are recalling the murderous
heart of the apartheid machine. Johan Theron, a
former special forces officer, has said how he
used lethal drugs, allegedly supplied by Basson,
to kill some of at least 200 political activists
before throwing their bodies in the sea. In 1983,
he said he chained three prisoners to a tree and
smeared a toxic ointment on their legs to see if
it would kill them. They survived the night and
were loaded onto a light aircraft, injected with
lethal muscle relaxants and their bodies dumped
160 km from the coast. Theron's pilot, known only
as witness K, said Theron had also used a hammer
when the drugs did not work.
Other self-confessed apartheid assassins claimed
Basson supplied them with lethal substances to
kill their victims by poisoning their
water supplies, beer, tea and orange juice. Last
week, witness Q said he had manufactured deadly
poisonous "toy" weapons such as a ring,
a walking stick, a screwdriver and an umbrella
for Basson.
While the hearing goes on the bearded, balding
Basson who still has a state-provided
bodyguard becomes more relaxed each day,
joking with his lawyers and the press. Chilling
though it may be, much of the evidence up to now
of Basson's alleged role in apartheid's killing
fields may be judged to be broadly circumstantial.
But whatever the outcome of his trial, it is
making South Africans again live through the
nightmares sown by apartheid.
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June
12, 2000
SPECIAL
REPORT
French
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Despite a legacy of state control, and an
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Police disguised as a TV crew trick a man
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AFRICA
Reliving
Apartheid Horrors
The trial of a South African cardiologist
accused of murder reopens old wounds
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